NAME

time - overview of time and timers

DESCRIPTION

RealtimeandprocesstimeRealtime is defined as time measured from some fixed point, either
from a standard point in the past (see the description of the Epoch and
calendar time below), or from some point (e.g., the start) in the life
of a process (elapsedtime).
Processtime is defined as the amount of CPU time used by a process.
This is sometimes divided into user and system components. User CPU
time is the time spent executing code in user mode. System CPU time is
the time spent by the kernel executing in system mode on behalf of the
process (e.g., executing system calls). The time(1) command can be
used to determine the amount of CPU time consumed during the execution
of a program. A program can determine the amount of CPU time it has
consumed using times(2), getrusage(2), or clock(3).
TheHardwareClock
Most computers have a (battery-powered) hardware clock which the kernel
reads at boot time in order to initialize the software clock. For
further details, see rtc(4) and hwclock(8).
TheSoftwareClock,HZ,andJiffies
The accuracy of various system calls that set timeouts, (e.g.,
select(2), sigtimedwait(2)) and measure CPU time (e.g., getrusage(2))
is limited by the resolution of the softwareclock, a clock maintained
by the kernel which measures time in jiffies. The size of a jiffy is
determined by the value of the kernel constant HZ.
The value of HZ varies across kernel versions and hardware platforms.
On i386 the situation is as follows: on kernels up to and including
2.4.x, HZ was 100, giving a jiffy value of 0.01 seconds; starting with
2.6.0, HZ was raised to 1000, giving a jiffy of 0.001 seconds. Since
kernel 2.6.13, the HZ value is a kernel configuration parameter and can
be 100, 250 (the default) or 1000, yielding a jiffies value of,
respectively, 0.01, 0.004, or 0.001 seconds. Since kernel 2.6.20, a
further frequency is available: 300, a number that divides evenly for
the common video frame rates (PAL, 25 HZ; NTSC, 30 HZ).
The times(2) system call is a special case. It reports times with a
granularity defined by the kernel constant USER_HZ. Userspace
applications can determine the value of this constant using
sysconf(_SC_CLK_TCK).
High-ResolutionTimers
Before Linux 2.6.21, the accuracy of timer and sleep system calls (see
below) was also limited by the size of the jiffy.
Since Linux 2.6.21, Linux supports high-resolution timers (HRTs),
optionally configurable via CONFIG_HIGH_RES_TIMERS. On a system that
supports HRTs, the accuracy of sleep and timer system calls is no
longer constrained by the jiffy, but instead can be as accurate as the
hardware allows (microsecond accuracy is typical of modern hardware).
You can determine whether high-resolution timers are supported by
checking the resolution returned by a call to clock_getres(2) or
looking at the "resolution" entries in /proc/timer_list.
HRTs are not supported on all hardware architectures. (Support is
provided on x86, arm, and powerpc, among others.)
TheEpoch
Unix systems represent time in seconds since the Epoch, 1970-01-01
00:00:00 +0000 (UTC).
A program can determine the calendartime using gettimeofday(2), which
returns time (in seconds and microseconds) that have elapsed since the
Epoch; time(2) provides similar information, but only with accuracy to
the nearest second. The system time can be changed using
settimeofday(2).
Broken-downtime
Certain library functions use a structure of type tm to represent
broken-downtime, which stores time value separated out into distinct
components (year, month, day, hour, minute, second, etc.). This
structure is described in ctime(3), which also describes functions that
convert between calendar time and broken-down time. Functions for
converting between broken-down time and printable string
representations of the time are described in ctime(3), strftime(3), and
strptime(3).
SleepingandSettingTimers
Various system calls and functions allow a program to sleep (suspend
execution) for a specified period of time; see nanosleep(2),
clock_nanosleep(2), and sleep(3).
Various system calls allow a process to set a timer that expires at
some point in the future, and optionally at repeated intervals; see
alarm(2), getitimer(2), timerfd_create(2), and timer_create(2).